Evaluating the Evidence 22.3: Émile Zola and Realism in Literature

Émile Zola and Realism in Literature

“There should no longer be any school, no more formulas, no standards of any sort; there is only life itself, an immense field where each may study and create as he likes,” wrote Émile Zola in 1867. The great Realist author applied these precepts in the opening lines of his 1885 masterpiece novel, Germinal, which championed the rights of French coal miners in the late nineteenth century.

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Over the open plain, beneath a starless sky as dark and thick as ink, a man walked alone along the highway from Marchiennes to Montsou, a straight paved road ten kilometres in length, intersecting the beetroot-fields. He could not even see the black soil before him, and only felt the immense flat horizon by the gusts of March wind, squalls as strong as on the sea, and frozen from sweeping leagues of marsh and naked earth. No tree could be seen against the sky, and the road unrolled as straight as a pier in the midst of the blinding spray of darkness.

The man had set out from Marchiennes about two o’clock. He walked with long strides, shivering beneath his worn cotton jacket and corduroy breeches. A small parcel tied in a check handkerchief troubled him much, and he pressed it against his side, sometimes with one elbow, sometimes with the other, so that he could slip to the bottom of his pockets both the benumbed hands that bled beneath the lashes of the wind. A single idea occupied his head — the empty head of a workman without work and without lodging — the hope that the cold would be less keen after sunrise. For an hour he went on thus, when on the left, two kilometres from Montsou, he saw red flames, three fires burning in the open air and apparently suspended. At first he hesitated, half afraid. Then he could not resist the painful need to warm his hands for a moment. . . .

Suddenly, at a bend in the road, the fires reappeared close to him, though he could not understand how they burnt so high in the dead sky, like smoky moons. But on the level soil another sight had struck him. It was a heavy mass, a low pile of buildings from which rose the silhouette of a factory chimney; occasional gleams appeared from dirty windows, five or six melancholy lanterns were hung outside to frames of blackened wood, which vaguely outlined the profiles of gigantic stages; and from this fantastic apparition, drowned in night and smoke, a single voice arose, the thick, long breathing of a steam escapement that could not be seen.

Then the man recognized a [mine] pit. His despair returned. What was the good? There would be no work. Instead of turning towards the buildings he decided at last to ascend the pit bank, on which burnt in iron baskets the three coal fires which gave light and warmth for work. The labourers in the cutting must have been working late; they were still throwing out the useless rubbish. . . . He could distinguish living shadows tipping over the trains or tubs near each fire.

EVALUATE THE EVIDENCE

  1. Zola claimed to represent “only life itself,” but the vivid description in his prose often creates heavily dramatized effects, as in this selection. Why does Zola use such deeply poetic imagery?
  2. How do the style and subject matter of Realism compare and contrast with those of Romanticism?

Source: Émile Zola, Germinal, trans. Havelock Ellis (London: Everyman’s Library, 1894).